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Attitudes of a high-risk group of pregnant Saudi Arabian women to prenatal screening for chromosomal anomalies
Author(s) -
Babay Za
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
eastern mediterranean health journal/eastern mediterranean health journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.442
H-Index - 47
eISSN - 1687-1634
pISSN - 1020-3397
DOI - 10.26719/2004.10.4-5.522
Subject(s) - prenatal screening , medicine , pregnancy , obstetrics , prenatal diagnosis , gynecology , antenatal screening , family medicine , fetus , genetics , biology
The attitude of 550 pregnant Saudi Arabian women aged > 35 years to prenatal screening for chromosomal anomalies was investigated. A total of 336 women [61.1%] accepted the general idea of prenatal screening while 160 [29.1%] did not; 54 women [9.8%] were undecided. There was a high acceptance of non-invasive methods such as ultrasound [61.3%] and biochemical screening [53.0%] but a low acceptance of invasive methods [34.2%]. The main reason for refusal of screening was the unacceptability of termination of pregnancy as a treatment option. There were statistically significant differences between those who accepted the idea of screening and those who did not with regard to their awareness of the availability of prenatal screening, their rejection of pregnancy termination, their doubt of the accuracy of the tests and in their belief that chromosomal abnormalities need not be screened for

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